Coin minted during the Jewish Revolt uncovered near the Temple Mount

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1,955-year-old coin minted in the final year of the Jewish Revolt against Rome, just months before the destruction of Second Temple, discovered near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.By World Israel News StaffArcheologists in Israel recently uncovered a rare coin dating back to the very end of the Second Temple period, minted by Jewish rebels following the overthrow of the Roman governor and shortly before the destruction of Jerusalem at the hands of Roman legions sent to crush the revolt.The bronze coin was uncovered near the southwest corner of the Temple Mount during an excavation by the Israel Antiquities Authority, in collaboration with the City of David and Jewish Quarter Reconstruction and Development Company.The coin was minted minted during the 4th year of the Great Revolt against the Romans, coinciding with the year 70 of the Common Era.One side of the coin carries the inscription in ancient Hebrew script: “For the Redemption of Zion”– expressing the desire of Jerusalem‘s Jews towards the end of the revolt.“In the last few days an unexpected gift was discovered: Yaniv David Levy, our coin researcher, came here and to his great surprise found a coin, covered in dirt,” said Esther Rakow-Mellet, archaeologist at the Israel Antiquities Authority.“Already then, we thought from the looks of it that it might be a rare coin. We waited anxiously for several days until it came back from cleaning, and it turned out that it was a greeting from the Jewish rebels in the Year Four of the Great Revolt.”According to Yanniv David Levy, a researcher and curator in the coin department of the Israel Antiquities Authority, “The coin is made of bronze, and its state of preservation is quite good.”“On its obverse side you can see a model of a goblet, and around it is an inscription in ancient Hebrew script: ‘LeGe’ulat Zion’, ‘For the Redemption of Zion’.”“On its reverse is a lulav, a palm frond used in the Sukkot festival ritual. Next to it are two etrogs, the citron used in that same ritual. The reverse bears the inscription: ‘Year Four’.”This inscription denotes the number of years since the outbreak of the rebellion and allows researchers to accurately date the coin to the period between the Hebrew month of Nissan (March-April) of the year 69 CE, and the month of Adar (February-March) of the year 70 CE.According to Levy, “The ‘Year Four’ bronze coins differ from their predecessors. Their size and weight increased significantly, and the earlier rebel coin inscription, ‘For the Freedom (Herut) of Zion’, is replaced by a new inscription – ‘For the Redemption of Zion’.”Experts believe that the Great Revolt Year Four coins were minted in Jerusalem under the leadership of Shimon Bar Giora, one of the prominent commanders in the revolt’s last year.Year Four coins are considered relatively rare, given the historical circumstances towards the end of the revolt and its impact on the much-reduced rebel production capabilities. Most of the Year Four coins were discovered in and around Jerusalem.According to Dr. Yuval Baruch, Excavation Director on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority, who has researched this site for over 25 years, the change in the inscriptions used on Jewish Revolt-era coins marks a major shift in how Judean Jews viewed the revolt.“The inscription on the coin – ‘For the Redemption of Zion’, replacing the earlier ‘For the Liberation of Zion’ – indicates a profound change of identity and mindset, and perhaps also reflects the desperate situation of the rebel forces about six months before the fall of Jerusalem on Tisha B’Av, the 9th of the Hebrew month of Av; in August of the year 70 CE.”“It would seem that in the rebellion’s fourth year, the mood of the rebels now besieged in Jerusalem changed from euphoria and anticipation of freedom at hand, to a dispirited mood and a yearning for redemption.”“It is also possible that the representatives of the ritual ‘Four Species’ depicted on the coin, which are symbols of the Sukkot Festival and the ritual national pilgrimage to the Temple, were intended to evoke among the rebels a sense of redemption and anticipation of a hoped-for miracle and happy times.”The post Coin minted during the Jewish Revolt uncovered near the Temple Mount appeared first on World Israel News.